Of course there some survivors of Auschwitz; including some children.
Yes, there are. Read.
yes.
at liberation there were about 7 500, but many of these died soon after. There were about 100 000 more survivors who had been in Auschwitz.
350000___Where does that very high figure come from?If you look at the answer for the question, `How many Holocaust survivors?` you will see where the figure came from.You also need to date the estimate, as there are fewer Holocausts survivors every year. In 2012, there are probably only 260,000 Holocaust survivors left.
Very few Holocaust survivors from the extermination concentration camps are still alive. Most of the survivors were males. And as no children below the age of 12 survived the camps, all survivors must have been born earlier than 1932. This would make the very youngest of them, 84 years old, as of 2015.
The number of people which survived WW2 has still to this day not been accurately recorded. What I can tell you is approx. how many people died, which was about 60 to 80 million people that's about 2.5-3 % of the world population.
According to Wikipedia, nobody born before 1897 is still alive.
There were only two (!) known survivors from Chelmno ... They are both dead now, so the answer to the question is none.
at liberation there were about 7 500, but many of these died soon after. There were about 100 000 more survivors who had been in Auschwitz.
350000___Where does that very high figure come from?If you look at the answer for the question, `How many Holocaust survivors?` you will see where the figure came from.You also need to date the estimate, as there are fewer Holocausts survivors every year. In 2012, there are probably only 260,000 Holocaust survivors left.
None of them is alive now.
Very few Holocaust survivors from the extermination concentration camps are still alive. Most of the survivors were males. And as no children below the age of 12 survived the camps, all survivors must have been born earlier than 1932. This would make the very youngest of them, 84 years old, as of 2015.
i think me and a few thousand ww2 vets. still live. byron
Yes. Most of the survivors who are still alive were young, in many cases very young, at the time of the Holocaust. Many years ago I met a woman who had been born in January 1945 at Auschwitz, in the camp, about 12 hours before it was liberated by the Soviet Army. Her parents were extremely lucky in that they had been sent to Auschwitz exceptionally late. Obviously, she had no recollection of the camp. She and her parents migrated to Britain in 1950.One of the best known survivors still alive is Elie Wiesel._________There are numerous museums around the US where one can tour the history of the Holocaust. Most of them provide tours once or twice a month that include an opportunity to meet and listen to a survivor. I visited the one in Detroit two years ago. The story was simple and very moving. He had watched his mother and little brother taken directly to the extermination portion of Aucshwitz while he went to the working side.Yes, many, but their numbers are dwindling rapidly.
20 people were pulled out alive only.
It is difficult to determine an exact number, but as of 2021, it is estimated that there are fewer than 1,000 American survivors of D-day still alive. The number has been decreasing rapidly as these veterans are in their late 90s and early 100s.
There were 712 survivors of the sinking of Titanic (and 1,496 victims).
I'm not quite sure what you mean. Obviously, when the Allies reached concentration camps they liberated them. The Soviet Army reached the three main sites of Auschwitz on 27 Janaury 1945 and were greeted by about 7,500 survivors, all of them malnourished and many of them desperately ill.
about 250 polar bears are still alive